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Comment by zeafoamrun

8 hours ago

Heh, a place where I worked some guy who left kept committing code for months (he went to work for a company we were a vendor for). Some of my teammates knew and just thought it was no big deal, he was fixing bugs and adding features.

The color the director turned when he found out!! Oh man.

so he was doing free labor for your company? What's he getting out of that?

  • he went to work for a company we were a vendor for

    Sounds like he's getting paid to work on the same thing by a slightly different stakeholder.

    I'd happily pay $$$$$$ to hire someone with commit access to Cloudflare, AWS or Google's codebase who could fix the goddamn bugs, let alone add new features.

    • > Sounds like he's getting paid to work on the same thing by a slightly different stakeholder.

      This honestly sounds like the sort of thing I'd sit down with the employee, their new employer, and various "Compliance Team" members, and firm up a bit.

      Sounds good for everyone.

      We get our bugs fixed, $vendor gets to say "Well we have this thing that was developed in-house for BoshNet, that might solve your problem too, it's going to cost you <some comical amount>", and everyone's happy.

      5 replies →

I have door codes and passwords for a major organisation that I last worked for somewhere in the region of 20 years ago. They haven't rotated a damn thing. I still know people who work there, and I guess technically I still support things for them in an informal question-over-a-pint kind of way, but damn me, put in some effort guys.